In 130+ slides filled with charts, graphs, and data points, we illustrated what’s happened recently across all sectors of the travel industry and what direction it is headed in over the following year.

From this deck we’ve pulled six slides looking at startups and venture capital and where the money is going — or drying up.

Funding in 2015 was more than double that of 2014, and four times 2010. Deals were nearly six times greater in that span, too. That doesn’t always qualify as smart money, but it speaks to a willingness to invest in the sector. We’ll likely see this slow in 2016, but it will likely be better than 2010.

Chart 2

The unicorns dominate here. But travel unicorns are some of the stronger in their class this time around with real revenues and a dedicated consumer base. While their challenges are real — especially between each other (Uber, Lyft) — they have yet to see many of their investors significantly writing down the value of their investments as we see in other sectors.

Chart 3

Minus the Marriott-Starwood deal, which wasn’t set enough to make this list, there are no travel brands in the 10-billion-plus range, and only two made it into the billions. Travel brands need to do a better job proving the real value of their business.

Chart 4

A nice way to phrase this: With few exceptions, travel tech exits are underwhelming. We need to see more fighting amongst companies to get hold of great travel brands.

Chart 5

A few brands (and we didn’t even include Uber here, since it’s not exclusively travel) just dominate the others.

Chart 6

In the long run, it’s not the number of dollars, it’s the quality of the deal.